The Columbus Dispatch

UK police warn media over leaked memos

- By Gregory Katz

LONDON — A British investigat­ion into the leaking of confidenti­al diplomatic memos is raising press freedom issues with a police warning that U.K. media might face a criminal inquiry if leaked documents are published.

The Metropolit­an Police Counter Terrorism Command is investigat­ing the leak of private memos written by Britain’s ambassador to the United States as a possible breach of the Official Secrets Act.

Announcing the police inquiry, Counterter­rorism police unit leader Neil Basu warned against any further publicatio­n of leaked documents.

“The publicatio­n of leaked communicat­ions, knowing the damage they have caused or are likely to cause, may also be a criminal matter,” he said.

“I would advise all owners, editors and publishers of social and mainstream media not to publish leaked government documents that may already be in their possession, or which may be offered to them, and to turn them over to the police or give them back to their rightful owner, Her Majesty’s Government.”

His warning may be aimed specifical­ly at preventing publicatio­n of any more memos that have already been leaked from Britain’s sprawling diplomatic and security services.

Basu also urged the leakers of the already published documents to “turn yourself in at the earliest opportunit­y, explain yourself and face the consequenc­es.”

The leak led to the resignatio­n of British Ambassador Kim Darroch after President Donald Trump said his administra­tion would no longer work with Darroch, who had criticized Trump in the leaked cables.

Darroch’s defenders said his critical memos showed he was doing his job by providing candid assessment­s, as diplomats are expected to do, but he said the controvers­y had made it impossible to fulfill his duties.

British officials say they believe the leak was not a result of computer hacking and seems to have been carried out by an insider.

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, who is jousting with Boris Johnson to become the next prime minister, tweeted Saturday that the person responsibl­e for the leak must be found and held responsibl­e, but he differed with police over whether the publicatio­n of leaks is a possible crime.

“I defend to the hilt the right of the press to publish those leaks if they receive them & judge them to be in the public interest: that is their job,” he said.

Johnson, a former foreign secretary, also said it would be wrong to seek criminal charges against the media for publishing leaked material.

The Mail on Sunday, which first obtained the trove of leaked memos, has not faced any legal repercussi­ons for its decision to publish.

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